SEO - Google SERPs, Knowledge Graph, Sitelinks

What Is SERP Stacking For SEO?
SERP stacking is an advanced Internet marketing tactic that enables your company to significantly increase its organic ranking visibility by claiming more real estate in the SERPs.

What is SERP? First off, before we explain what SERP stacking is and why it is helpful for SEO, we should first explain to you what ‘SERP’ means. SERP is an acronym that stands for Search Engine Results Page. A SERP is a list of web pages for a given keyword search query. So SEO professionals or SEO-savvy web designers refer to SERPs, they are talking about search engine rankings (most typically Google rankings) and how and where certain websites and web pages fall within search engine results. What is SERP Stacking? We define SERP stacking as a company that has multiple first page rankings for the same business. What are SERP ‘Stackable’ Web Pages? Website: Your website and its core pages are obviously the foundation and central hub for SERP stacking and your entire search engine optimization campaign.
Ranking Multiple Domains to Own More SERP Real Estate. Got SEO Basics? 5 Tips To Boost Your Organic CTR. Dominate Your Brand Search Engine Result Page.

Taking white label reports to the next level with MyRanks. In today’s article we’ll talk about taking your SEO reports from the regular PDFs to the mobile realm, the great benefits this can have on your sales pitch, and how it can improve your customer support, impress your clients and strengthen their trust in you.

As usual, I will be referencing in my examples PRT’s features, specifically our PRT mobile app and MyRanks mobile app. SEO ranking reports are an essential part of keeping clients happy and up to date. Nowadays, the orthodox approach to sending SEO reports to clients is still via PDFs that are sent to their email, which is great, but somewhat surprising considering virtually everyone has a smartphone and spends less and less time in front of their computer screen and chooses the phone screen instead. Nothing like checking your ranks over a glass of white wine MyRanks is essentially the easiest and most convenient way your clients can view the progress of their ranks.

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SEO & Sitelinks: How to Get Google Subheadings in Search Results. By Kara Anton, Managing Consultant The goal of this tutorial is to make your website's search engine result look like this: Note: #1 points to your main URL (ex: www.relishtraymedia.com) and #2 points to the important internal links from your site (ex: www.relishtraymedia.com/blog), otherwise known as the sitelinks Sitelinks & Why You Want ‘Em!

The tiny subheadings (aka internal links) that are shown below a website’s main URL in Google's organic search results are called Sitelinks. These links serve as shortcuts to the most important pages of your site; they help prospective visitors easily find the information they need and navigate your site in a timely manner. Higher link visibility, which leads to more trafficDecrease in bounce rates, since users can zero in on specific pagesPush competitor sites further down the page While other results are shifted below, each of your sitelinks showcases more meta description text (about 48 characters of bonus advertising!).
Ask Google to re-crawl your URLs - Search Console Help. If you’ve recently made changes to a URL on your site, you can update your web page in Google Search with the Submit to Index function of the Fetch as Google tool.

This function allows you to ask Google to crawl and index your URL. Before you submit a URL, you might want to fetch (or fetch and render) it first to diagnose and debug any crawling or rendering errors with the page. Once Fetch as Google finishes processing your fetch, you can click Submit to Index to notify Google that your URL is ready to be re-crawled. Note that this function appears only if your fetch meets these criteria: Your fetch must have a complete, partial, or redirected fetch status. Google crawls and indexes the URL content as it is, after you click Submit.
Search Console. Getting New Websites to Rank. New websites have difficulty ranking for popular, high-volume keywords for two primary reasons: Getting your new site to rank will take time, ew websites don’t have much “authority”.

The amount of on-page optimization you do when targeting a specific keyword is only half the battle. The Google algorithm takes site or domain authority into account when assigning rankings. Your site’s authority depends on factors like age of domain (hence, new websites necessarily have less authority) as well as the number of in-bound links your site has developed and “PageRank” of competitors (when compared to you) that are going after the same phrases.

To develop page rank you need to add in-bound links to your site on a regular basis (monthly). The competition for “popular keywords” is that much stiffer. The web is growing all the time, and the huge increase in the number of unique domains each year – in 2011, over 50 million new domains were created!
Study: Google Now Displays Rich Answers For 19.45% Of Queries. Specify your social profiles to Google
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